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The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles

The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles is an American television series that aired on ABC from March 4, 1992, to July 24, 1993. Filming took place in various locations around the world, with "Old Indy" bookend segments filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina and on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. The series was a Lucasfilm production in association with Amblin Television and Paramount Television.[1]

For the spin-off video game, see The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles (video game).

The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles

The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones

George Lucas

United States

English

2

28 (plus 4 TV films) (list of episodes)

George Lucas

approx. 45 min. per episode

March 4, 1992 (1992-03-04) –
June 16, 1996 (1996-06-16)

The series explores the childhood, adolescence and early adulthood of the fictional character Indiana Jones and primarily stars Sean Patrick Flanery and Corey Carrier as the title character, with George Hall playing an elderly version of Jones for the bookends of most episodes, though Harrison Ford bookended one episode. The show was created and executive produced by George Lucas, who also created, co-wrote, and executive produced the Indiana Jones feature films.


Due to its large budget and low viewership ratings, the series was canceled in 1993. However, following the series' cancellation, four made-for-television films were produced from 1994 to 1996 in an attempt to continue the series. In 1999, the series was re-edited into 22 television films under the title The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones.

Soundtrack[edit]

The series' main theme was composed by Laurence Rosenthal, who wrote much of the music for the series. Joel McNeely also wrote music for many episodes; he received an Emmy in 1993 for the Episode "Scandal of 1920". French composer Frédéric Talgorn composed some music for the episode set in World War I France ("The Somme, July 1916/Germany, August 1916"). Music for "Transylvania, September 1918" was composed by Curt Sobel.

Vol. 1 – Historical Lecture: "The Promise of Progress"

Vol. 2 – Historical Lecture: "War and Revolution"

Vol. 3 – Historical Lecture: "New Gods for Old"

[25]

Reception[edit]

The series was nominated for 18 Emmy Awards and won 6.[30] In 1993, Corey Carrier was nominated for the Young Artist Award in the category of "Best Young Actor Starring in a Television Series". In 1994, David Tattersall was nominated for the ASC Award in the category of "Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular Series". At the 1994 Golden Globes, the series was nominated for "Best TV-Series — Drama".[31]


Though the series won many awards, it also received some criticism. The New York Times called the pilot "clunky" for example.[32]

Marketing[edit]

Four volumes of music from the series were released on CD. The show also spawned a series of adaptations and spin-off novels, a NES game The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles developed and published by Jaleco, a Sega Mega Drive game Instruments of Chaos starring Young Indiana Jones, trading cards and other products.

Champlin, Charles. George Lucas: The Creative Impulse (Harry N. Abrams, 1997).

Madsen, Dan. The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles: On the Set and Behind the Scenes (Doubleday Books for Young Readers, 1992).

Munn, Michael (1992). Clint Eastwood: Hollywood's Loner. London: Robson Books.  0-86051-790-X.

ISBN

. InnerMind.com. The Inner Mind. Retrieved 22 August 2014.

"Young Indiana Jones Magazine articles and other things"

at IMDb

The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles

Chronological episode guide

extensive coverage

TheRaider.net – The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles

– A fan site that details the educational aspects of the series.

Adventures in Learning with Indiana Jones

Archived 2013-05-29 at the Wayback Machine – A fan site that records filming locations seen in the series.

On the Trail of Young Indy